Archive for category soup

Cold weather hotpot

“This recipe stretches a pack of mince brilliantly – and is perfect eaten straight from the bowl with a spoon”

  • 2 onions cubed
  • 300 g carrots cubed
  • 1 kg potatoes cubed
  • 450 g lean minced beef
  • 2 beef stock cubes
  • 900ml water, boiled
  • 400 g baked beans, from the can
  • worcestershire sauce, just a splash
  • 1 handful parsley, roughly chopped

Cube all the veggies and put the kettle on.  Heat a large non-stick pan, add the mince and fry quickly, stirring all the time, until evenly browned. Crumble in the stock cubes and mix well. Add the prepared vegetables, stir them around, then pour in 900ml/11⁄2 pints of hot water from the kettle. Bring to the boil.

Reduce the heat, cover and simmer for 25-30 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Stir in the baked beans and a generous splash of Worcestershire sauce and heat through. Taste and add salt and pepper if necessary.

Scatter over the parsley, then ladle the hotpot into bowls. Put the Worcestershire sauce bottle on the table in case anyone fancies a bit more spice.

Source : Good Food : March 2003 (changed slightly in wording, but the recipe is the same)

Servings/Yield : 4 servings

Rating : 5 out of 5

Difficulty : Easy

Preparation Times : Ready in: 40 – 45 Minutes

Nutritional notes : Per Serving : 417 kcalories, protein 29g, carbohydrate 55g, fat 10 g, saturated fat 4g, fibre 8g, salt 2.9 g

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Honeyed Carrot Soup

“Kids love this rich, warming soup but it’s sophisticated enough for adults, too”

  • 2 tbsp. Butter
  • 2 small leeks, Sliced
  • 800 g Carrots, roughly chopped
  • 2 tsp honey
  • small Dried Chili Flakes, optional
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2.5 liters vegetable stock

Melt the butter in a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add the leeks to the pan, then cook for 3 mins until starting to soften. Add the carrots, honey, chilli (if using) and bay leaf, then cook for 2 mins.

Pour in the stock, bring to the boil, then simmer for 30 mins. Blend the soup in batches, return to a clean pan, then season to taste. When ready to serve, bring back to a simmer, then ladle into mugs. Add a swirl of soured cream or yogurt and serve with garlic bread or bacon butties.


Source : Good Food : November 2007 – Page 78 Recipe by Lesley Waters

Servings/Yield : 6 servings

Rating : 5 out of 5

Difficulty : Easy

Cuisine : European : Eastern : Russian

Preparation Times : Prep: 10 Minutes Cook: 35 Minutes

Nutritional notes : Per serving : 116 kcalories, protein 3g, carbohydrate 16g, fat 5 g, saturated fat 3g, fibre 6g, salt 0.59 g

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Proper spicy pot noodle

potnoodle

“The perfect snack for you or the children – ready in minutes”

  • 2 tsps thai curry paste
  • 3 spring onions, roughly chopped
  • 1 large carrot, grated
  • 500 ml vegetable stock
  • 1 handful Frozen Peas
  • 150 g straight to wok noodles

Add the Thai curry paste to a pan and fry over a medium heat for 2 mins, be careful with this, as depending on the curry paste you use, you could end up burning this to the bottom of the pan; it’s also pretty potent stuff, so decide how spicy you want your soup at this point, sometimes less is more.

Stir in the spring onions and grated carrot, then cook for 1 min. Pour in a big mugful of hot vegetable or chicken stock and a handful frozen peas. Bring to the boil, then simmer for 2 mins until the carrot is just cooked. Stir in the sachet of straight-to-wok noodles and heat through. Ladle into a mug or a bowl and scatter with sesame seeds, if you like. Serve straight away.

Notes : I like the fact that I know what’s in it. Try finding an off the shelf soup like this without MSG or questionable additives.

Source : Good Food : April 2006

Servings/Yield : 1 servings

Rating : 5 out of 5

Difficulty : Easy-ish

Cuisine : Asian

Course : Appetizer

Preparation Times : Prep: 5 Minutes Cook: 5 Minutes

Nutritional notes : Per Serving: 366 kcalories, protein 13g, carbohydrate 61g, fat 9 g, saturated fat 1g, fibre 9g, salt 2.85 g

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Butternut squash soup with chilli & crème fraîche

pumpkinsoup

“Come in from the cold to a warming bowlful of autumn”

  • 1 kg butternut squash, peeled and deseeded
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 2 onions, diced
  • 1 garlic clove, thinly sliced
  • 2 red chillies (mild), deseeded and finely chopped
  • 850 ml vegetable stock, hot
  • 4 tbsp creme fraiche, plus more to serve

Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Cut the squash into large cubes, about 4cm/1½in across, then toss in a large roasting tin with half the olive oil. Roast for 30 mins, turning once during cooking, until golden and soft.

While the squash cooks, melt the butter with the remaining oil in a large saucepan, then add the onions, garlic and ¾ of the chilli. Cover and cook on a very low heat for 15-20 mins until the onions are completely soft.

Tip the squash into the pan, add the stock and the crème fraîche, then whizz with a stick blender until smooth. For a really silky soup, put the soup into a liquidiser and blitz it in batches. Return to the pan, gently reheat, then season to taste. Serve the soup in bowls with swirls of crème fraîche and a scattering of the remaining chopped chilli.

Notes : We used Soya Cream instead of creme fraiche as well as pumpkin in leu of butternut squash

Source : Good Food : October 2009

Servings/Yield : 4 servings

Rating : 5 out of 5

Difficulty : Easy

Preparation Times : Prep: 15 Minutes Cook: 50 Minutes

Nutritional notes : Per Serving: 264 kcalories, protein 5g, carbohydrate 28g, fat 15 g, saturated fat 7g, fibre 6g, salt 0.61 g (These figures will be a hell of a lot lower with the Soya Cream alternative)

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Granzuppa di Legumi Mistra

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“We picked up a mix of pulses from a small village resort Valli di Sole (20 minutes from Madonna di Campiglio) in the Trentino part of the Dolomites of Northern Italy during a Snowboarding Holiday for around 2 Euros.  Dirt cheap stuff, even though you can find the same pulses anywhere else, you just have to learn to combine them. You could also find huge bags of porcini mushrooms for a fraction of the price anywhere else”.

This is my mothers recipe, which was given to me over the phone; the wife loves it so I guess I did something right.

The Recipe: Granzuppa di Legumi Mistra

  • 200 g Legumi Misti (Soup Mix, pulses etc…), soaked in water
  • 3 small zucchini, cubed
  • 2 medium Onions, cubed
  • 1 large carrot, cubed
  • 1 Celery Stalk, Chopped Stalk and Leaves
  • 1 large Potato, Cubed
  • 1 handful Parsley, Chopped
  • 1 large Chicken Drumstick
  • 200 g Pancetta Cubetti
  • 1 Chicken Stock Cube
  • Salt
  • Pepper

Soak 200g of the Beans and Pulses from the Bag in a bowl full of water (A litre should do) this should be done over night.

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Prepare all the ingredients for the soup:

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Chop the Zucchini (Aka. Marrows or Courgettes) these should be as big as a Golfball or slightly larger, too large and you end up with a bunch of seeds and less side flesh. Chop to the consistency of small cubes the size of Hash Browns.  Do the same with the carrot.

Onion should be twice the size of a Golfball and cubed to the same size as above.

Celery should be a good size but not too big where it looks like it will overpower the rest of the vegetables. Remember that you want equal amounts of each vegetable. It’s always good to throw into individual bowls so that you can have a general look of what’s going into the soup. Celery should be split down the middle and chopped into 1-2mm cuts from the stock all the way to the leaves. You’ll have a bowl mixed with celery leaves and celery stalk by the end of it. Looks strange but really works out in the end.

Potato should be large, and cut into cubes similar to the Zucchini. I did not peel the potato, but this is up to the soup maker at the end of the day.

Grab the parsley in your hand and make sure you’ve got a fistful of it, chop off anything you have left. The result should be a handful of Parsley. Chop this up like you did to the Celery Stalk and Leaves. Difference here is you want more leaves than stalk.

Prepare some boiling water for the next steps. (Use a Kettle)

Prepare a large pot (mine was 15cm in Diameter and 10cm high) Add a couple of tablespoons of Olive Oil to the bottom and add the Pancetta Cubes when it’s suitably hot enough. Fry the Bacon Cubes until they have thuroughly cooked, but are not crispy. Add all the veggies into the pot at this point and give them a mix. Remove the skin from the drumstick and throw it in the middle with a cube of chicken stock (this is optional you can use a breast of chicken, or no chicken at all if you wish) stir the veggies and chicken for 10-15minutes making sure their somewhat stir-fried. add salt and pepper to the mix. Add the Beans!

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DSCF2149 copyAdd the water to the mix and start the timer for 2 hours (The water level should be at least 1-2inches from the top of the veggies). Stir occasionally and remove the chicken leg or breast once it’s cooked (10-20min) Shred the chicken and throw back into the soup (Without the bone)

This soup takes up to 2 hours,make sure that you constantly add water to the pot as it boils off and gets absorbed by the veggies. The soup toward the last 30minutes of cooking should be the consistency of a very watery risotto. It should be starchy and stirring the soup should be thick and not watery.

Notes :  It was suggested to boil the Beans and Pulses before adding to the soup, this hasn’t been attempted yet.

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